Digital Humanities Speaker Series Archive

As part of the Digital Humanities Speaker Series: State of the Practice, Claire Stewart will give a talk called “Curating Humanities Data: Law, Technology, & Reality,” at 3:15 pm on Wednesday, April 16, 2014 in Siegel Hall, Room 218.

Two graduate students in the Humanities Department's Graduate Program in Technology and the Humanities will present in the Digital Humanities Series on Wednesday, January 22, 2014 from 3:15 - 5 pm in Siegel 218.

The 2013-2014 Digital Humanities Speaker Series will be held on Wednesdays from 3:15-5pm in the Siegel Hall conference room (SH 218) this fall and spring. This year’s theme is “State of the Practice.”
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"The courts of the civil rights era were right to recognize that they were not the correct institution to resolve these kinds of claims. The courts today should remain on the same wise path and leave this issue to the political process," Christopher Schmidt writes.

“The NLRB tends to overrule its prior precedents much more frequently than courts do,” said Professor Malin. “It’s largely become understood that when there’s a change in administration in the White House…you’re likely to see a lot of overruling.”

"The ruling in Sinnott v. Peck is one of many recent landmark state court decisions that protect same-sex parents’ rights and preserve the bonds between parents and their children," writes Professor Kreis.

Built in 1971, the building was designed by John Warren Moutoussamy, an architect who studied under Mies van der Rohe at Illinois Tech. The tower represents the first and only downtown Chicago high-rise to be designed by an African American.

Due to the Christmas Holiday, time cards for the period of Sunday, December 17, 2017 through Saturday, December 30, 2017 for the pay date of Friday, January 5, 2018 (BW 1) must be submitted by 10 a.m. and approved no later than 4 p.m. on Friday, December 22, 2017.